To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

<3^« HUNTLEY ^««*
VOLUME 11 — NUMBER 4
THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1970
— PHONE —
•68-56S] U No Anaver 4S»-0998
rCHOOL FILE ]l-}UilZY. ILL
10 PAGES
'BE SURE YOU ARE RIGffT, THEN GO AHEAD" — David Crockett
7 oeati per cep>
Dental Demonstration At School School Report New Addition For Union Special
On Friday, Apr. 24, Dr. George Burbach and dental assistant, Joy Sherer of the Kishwaukee Valley Dental Clinic in WooUstoclc, came to visit the second graders of Hunt¬ ley elementary school.
Dr. Burhacli gave a talk and demonstrated the jfTOper care o( teeth. Upon completition of his talk, he gave each child a coloring book on aeiiial care, a tooth brush and paste, and an article on care of the tcsth to take home to their parents.
The children enjoyed the visit im¬ mensely.
Huntley On TV
On Sunday morning, April 12th, pictures of Huntley were shown on television in Fullerton, Califomia. (Fullerton is a suburb of I.os An¬ geles). The program stressed the need for doctors in small towns for a five-state area. Although other Illinois towns were mentioned, Huntley was the only one pictured.
This program was seen by Mrs. A. W. Line who lives in Fullerton. She is the mother of Mrs. LeRoy Marks of Huntley and visted here last summer. |
500 Attend OpenHouse
Pictured above are .lanet & Harold Henseii, Jr. son of Mr. & Mrs. Harold Hansen of Bonnie Brae. Hunlley. The children selected those who received eifts at the open house and 25th anniversary of Hansen Plumbinc & HeatlDE. A list of these names appear elsewhere in the paper.
Hansen's Plun'bing & Heating held a combination 25th Anniversary and Open Housi.' at their new location on kouto 47. Approximately 500 people wore in attendance at the two-day affair Mr. 01ivi>r Hansen termed the affair a huge success. Hansen's wishes to thank all those who made it a success.
Door prizes vcre presented to the " following people: TV — Paul Mat¬ tingly, Huntley; Garbage Disposal. Mrs. Harry Isenhart; dryer, David Skytte, Huntley; Incinerator, Mr. & Mrs. Mason. Elgin; Moen faucet, Art Rice, Marengo; Hostess warm- Continued on Page Two OPEN HOUSE
Medical Center Mortgage Down $1000
The Directors of the Medical Cen¬ ter want to take this means of notifying the public of action that was taken at their last Board of Directors meeting. The Directors voted to apply $1,000 against the existing mortgage of the Huntley Medical Building, thus leaving DOWN $1000
Continued on Page Two
Mr. Jink, Mr. Bein, Mr. Mich¬ elsen and Mr. Stading were pres¬ ent at the meeting. Ahsent was Miss Mackeben and Mr. Brandwein. Mr Kwain. Mr. O'Brien, Mr. Banks and Mr. Marks were present at the meeting. At 7:55 Mr. Brandwein made his appearance.
The board had a closed meeting with Mr. Kwain.
At this point in the meeting, President Jirik announced the com¬ mittees for the comming year. Transportation Committee —
Chairman, 'William Bein; Mam- bor, Richard Michelsen.
President Jirik stated that the purpose of the Transportation com was to determine the cost of trans¬ portation, comparison, acquisition of new equipment, safety of stud¬ ents, routes, gasoline bid preparat¬ ions, control of number of students per bus in all areas, expansion of routes anad future planning. Athletic and Grounds Committee Chairman, Ed Brandwein; Mem¬ ber; Gene Lindsey.
Purpose — Coordinate the use of School facilities for non-school use, schedule same, maintain calendar of events, maintainance of outside areas, review and appraisal of ath Ictic equipment. Territory Committee —
CliairmaA, £Ur^ Bastian; }&.exa- toer, Gary Grau.
Purpose — Review insurance pro gram, maintainance and up date territory map, be aware of growth trends in area, possible additions to school district, total cost of insur¬ ance, projection of enrollment. Education Committee —
Chairman — Richard Michelsen; Member, Larry Smith and Dorothy ¦'i Thrun.
,^ Purpose - Comparison of curri- .{yculum with schools in area, class- , |;'room visitation, areas of curricular . v;jf expansion, adult education, meet- '¦ V- ing with teachers committees as .^ v] necessary, act as personal contact i'>Afor showing perspective teachers i.J'arroimd area. '^. Finance Committee — S Chairman, Ernest Stading, Mem ' bers, Miss Mackeben and Wayne Continued on Page Two SCHOOL REPORT
Annual Park. Board Meeting
The annual and regular meeting of the HunUey Park Board was held April 22nd, at 8:10 p.m. The roll noted the following present: Com¬ missioners Deicke, Piske, Parisek, Ream and Tessendorf.
The president asked that the min¬ utes of the March 25th meeting bo road, after which a motion was read by Commissioner Tessendorf. seconded by Commissioner Ream, to approve the minutes as read and upon roll call, ;dl comn;issioners present voted aye and the minutes were approved.
The Treasurer's report was then presented. It showed a begirming balance at March 1, 1970 of $10,- 587.07; bills paid amounted to $L- 347.07, leaving a balance of $9,240 in the accpunt. The 5% savings account noted interested at March 31, 1970 of $145.33 bringing the balance to $5,506. Distribution of checking as follcwrs: General — $8,- 198.64; Recreation — $1,312.77; Pension -— $i81.85; Insurance — Continued on Page Two ANNUAL PARK MEETING
Mr. William S. North, president of Union Special Machine Company announced a 72,000 sq. ft. addition to the Huntley plant at ground breaking ceremonies Thursday, Apr. 23rd. The new addition, to be lo¬ cated on morthwost side of fhe exist¬ ing building, will handle two new Stack-0-Maiic cranes each hand¬ ling 600 pallets of work in pro¬ cess. This IS one of the most ad¬ vanced methods known today for handling material. N?w advanced machining centers for sewing ma¬ chine bed manufacturing, crank shaft, and grinding departments will also be set up in the new build¬ ing.
In atterKlance at the ground break¬ ing ceremony in addition to Mr. North, was the mayor Huntley, W. Brill; John Lowrie and Charles Trul- son, of Campbell-Lowrie-Lauter- milch Corp, thp general contractor; Frank Benevich of Metz, Olson jind Youngren, 1 nc. the ahchitects;
L. E. Parker, Union Special Hunt¬ ley plant engineer; and F. N. Braa- then. Union Special Chicago plant engineer. Construction on the all steel and concrete structure will be¬ gin immediately and completition is planned shorilv after the first of 1971.
The addition will match the exist¬ ing architecture and will have nat¬ ural gas-fired heating and ventilat¬ ing, lOO-foo*; candle illumination, and an overhead fire protection sprinkler system with a 200.000- gallon underground reservoir. A new waste compactor system is now be¬ ing installed which will eliminate incineration ot combustible mater¬ ials.
This will be the seventh enlarge¬ ment since Union Special started manufacturing operadons in Hunt¬ ley in 1948 and it will provide more efficient manufacturing to provide for projected company growth and manufacturing speace requirements.
Clean Up Day For Huntley
April 22 was Earth Day all over the country. Our high school de¬ cided to have discussion and speech¬ es about our countries environment¬ al problems.
As a result, a group (rf high school students decided on a clean up day for our community. April 26th was therefore reserved as clean up day.
A large group of concerned stu¬ dents showed up to pick up trash around our community. The stu¬ dents filled four pickup tnicks with trash. It was hard to believe that this much Htter existed in the streets and alleys of our commun¬ ity.
We would like to thank Art Kahl for allowing up to dump our trash. Contiaiied on Page Two CLEAN UP DAY
Hit & Run
On Sunday morning, April 26th, at approximately 6:00 a.m., the body of James R. Roth 18, of Box 148, Gilberts, III., was discovered by a pas^g motorist. A man traveling down the road saw an object laying along side the road an! after dieck- ing to see »*flt it was, discovered the body ol James Roth, laying- in the westbound lane ot the Dundee Rd. It is believed that he was struck by some sort of a vehicle and the vehicle had left the scene. In¬ vestigation is stai under way at this time.
The body was taken to tte James A. O'Coifflor Funenal Hrane in Hunt¬ ley.

Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival Image is a 1-bit bitonal tiff that was direct scanned from original material at 300 dpi. The original file size was 176 kilobytes.

This material may be protected by U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S. Code).

Publisher

This Collection was digitized and loaded into CONTENTdm by OCLC Preservation Service Center (Bethlehem, PA) for the Huntley Area Public Library

Source

Reproduction of library's print newspaper archives

Contributing Institution

Huntley Area Public Library

Language

ENG

FullText

<3^« HUNTLEY ^««*
VOLUME 11 — NUMBER 4
THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1970
— PHONE —
•68-56S] U No Anaver 4S»-0998
rCHOOL FILE ]l-}UilZY. ILL
10 PAGES
'BE SURE YOU ARE RIGffT, THEN GO AHEAD" — David Crockett
7 oeati per cep>
Dental Demonstration At School School Report New Addition For Union Special
On Friday, Apr. 24, Dr. George Burbach and dental assistant, Joy Sherer of the Kishwaukee Valley Dental Clinic in WooUstoclc, came to visit the second graders of Hunt¬ ley elementary school.
Dr. Burhacli gave a talk and demonstrated the jfTOper care o( teeth. Upon completition of his talk, he gave each child a coloring book on aeiiial care, a tooth brush and paste, and an article on care of the tcsth to take home to their parents.
The children enjoyed the visit im¬ mensely.
Huntley On TV
On Sunday morning, April 12th, pictures of Huntley were shown on television in Fullerton, Califomia. (Fullerton is a suburb of I.os An¬ geles). The program stressed the need for doctors in small towns for a five-state area. Although other Illinois towns were mentioned, Huntley was the only one pictured.
This program was seen by Mrs. A. W. Line who lives in Fullerton. She is the mother of Mrs. LeRoy Marks of Huntley and visted here last summer. |
500 Attend OpenHouse
Pictured above are .lanet & Harold Henseii, Jr. son of Mr. & Mrs. Harold Hansen of Bonnie Brae. Hunlley. The children selected those who received eifts at the open house and 25th anniversary of Hansen Plumbinc & HeatlDE. A list of these names appear elsewhere in the paper.
Hansen's Plun'bing & Heating held a combination 25th Anniversary and Open Housi.' at their new location on kouto 47. Approximately 500 people wore in attendance at the two-day affair Mr. 01ivi>r Hansen termed the affair a huge success. Hansen's wishes to thank all those who made it a success.
Door prizes vcre presented to the " following people: TV — Paul Mat¬ tingly, Huntley; Garbage Disposal. Mrs. Harry Isenhart; dryer, David Skytte, Huntley; Incinerator, Mr. & Mrs. Mason. Elgin; Moen faucet, Art Rice, Marengo; Hostess warm- Continued on Page Two OPEN HOUSE
Medical Center Mortgage Down $1000
The Directors of the Medical Cen¬ ter want to take this means of notifying the public of action that was taken at their last Board of Directors meeting. The Directors voted to apply $1,000 against the existing mortgage of the Huntley Medical Building, thus leaving DOWN $1000
Continued on Page Two
Mr. Jink, Mr. Bein, Mr. Mich¬ elsen and Mr. Stading were pres¬ ent at the meeting. Ahsent was Miss Mackeben and Mr. Brandwein. Mr Kwain. Mr. O'Brien, Mr. Banks and Mr. Marks were present at the meeting. At 7:55 Mr. Brandwein made his appearance.
The board had a closed meeting with Mr. Kwain.
At this point in the meeting, President Jirik announced the com¬ mittees for the comming year. Transportation Committee —
Chairman, 'William Bein; Mam- bor, Richard Michelsen.
President Jirik stated that the purpose of the Transportation com was to determine the cost of trans¬ portation, comparison, acquisition of new equipment, safety of stud¬ ents, routes, gasoline bid preparat¬ ions, control of number of students per bus in all areas, expansion of routes anad future planning. Athletic and Grounds Committee Chairman, Ed Brandwein; Mem¬ ber; Gene Lindsey.
Purpose — Coordinate the use of School facilities for non-school use, schedule same, maintain calendar of events, maintainance of outside areas, review and appraisal of ath Ictic equipment. Territory Committee —
CliairmaA, £Ur^ Bastian; }&.exa- toer, Gary Grau.
Purpose — Review insurance pro gram, maintainance and up date territory map, be aware of growth trends in area, possible additions to school district, total cost of insur¬ ance, projection of enrollment. Education Committee —
Chairman — Richard Michelsen; Member, Larry Smith and Dorothy ¦'i Thrun.
,^ Purpose - Comparison of curri- .{yculum with schools in area, class- , |;'room visitation, areas of curricular . v;jf expansion, adult education, meet- '¦ V- ing with teachers committees as .^ v] necessary, act as personal contact i'>Afor showing perspective teachers i.J'arroimd area. '^. Finance Committee — S Chairman, Ernest Stading, Mem ' bers, Miss Mackeben and Wayne Continued on Page Two SCHOOL REPORT
Annual Park. Board Meeting
The annual and regular meeting of the HunUey Park Board was held April 22nd, at 8:10 p.m. The roll noted the following present: Com¬ missioners Deicke, Piske, Parisek, Ream and Tessendorf.
The president asked that the min¬ utes of the March 25th meeting bo road, after which a motion was read by Commissioner Tessendorf. seconded by Commissioner Ream, to approve the minutes as read and upon roll call, ;dl comn;issioners present voted aye and the minutes were approved.
The Treasurer's report was then presented. It showed a begirming balance at March 1, 1970 of $10,- 587.07; bills paid amounted to $L- 347.07, leaving a balance of $9,240 in the accpunt. The 5% savings account noted interested at March 31, 1970 of $145.33 bringing the balance to $5,506. Distribution of checking as follcwrs: General — $8,- 198.64; Recreation — $1,312.77; Pension -— $i81.85; Insurance — Continued on Page Two ANNUAL PARK MEETING
Mr. William S. North, president of Union Special Machine Company announced a 72,000 sq. ft. addition to the Huntley plant at ground breaking ceremonies Thursday, Apr. 23rd. The new addition, to be lo¬ cated on morthwost side of fhe exist¬ ing building, will handle two new Stack-0-Maiic cranes each hand¬ ling 600 pallets of work in pro¬ cess. This IS one of the most ad¬ vanced methods known today for handling material. N?w advanced machining centers for sewing ma¬ chine bed manufacturing, crank shaft, and grinding departments will also be set up in the new build¬ ing.
In atterKlance at the ground break¬ ing ceremony in addition to Mr. North, was the mayor Huntley, W. Brill; John Lowrie and Charles Trul- son, of Campbell-Lowrie-Lauter- milch Corp, thp general contractor; Frank Benevich of Metz, Olson jind Youngren, 1 nc. the ahchitects;
L. E. Parker, Union Special Hunt¬ ley plant engineer; and F. N. Braa- then. Union Special Chicago plant engineer. Construction on the all steel and concrete structure will be¬ gin immediately and completition is planned shorilv after the first of 1971.
The addition will match the exist¬ ing architecture and will have nat¬ ural gas-fired heating and ventilat¬ ing, lOO-foo*; candle illumination, and an overhead fire protection sprinkler system with a 200.000- gallon underground reservoir. A new waste compactor system is now be¬ ing installed which will eliminate incineration ot combustible mater¬ ials.
This will be the seventh enlarge¬ ment since Union Special started manufacturing operadons in Hunt¬ ley in 1948 and it will provide more efficient manufacturing to provide for projected company growth and manufacturing speace requirements.
Clean Up Day For Huntley
April 22 was Earth Day all over the country. Our high school de¬ cided to have discussion and speech¬ es about our countries environment¬ al problems.
As a result, a group (rf high school students decided on a clean up day for our community. April 26th was therefore reserved as clean up day.
A large group of concerned stu¬ dents showed up to pick up trash around our community. The stu¬ dents filled four pickup tnicks with trash. It was hard to believe that this much Htter existed in the streets and alleys of our commun¬ ity.
We would like to thank Art Kahl for allowing up to dump our trash. Contiaiied on Page Two CLEAN UP DAY
Hit & Run
On Sunday morning, April 26th, at approximately 6:00 a.m., the body of James R. Roth 18, of Box 148, Gilberts, III., was discovered by a pas^g motorist. A man traveling down the road saw an object laying along side the road an! after dieck- ing to see »*flt it was, discovered the body ol James Roth, laying- in the westbound lane ot the Dundee Rd. It is believed that he was struck by some sort of a vehicle and the vehicle had left the scene. In¬ vestigation is stai under way at this time.
The body was taken to tte James A. O'Coifflor Funenal Hrane in Hunt¬ ley.